Shanghai Cuisine from Classic Hotel

If you are looking for famous Shanghai cuisine, Benbang cuisine (本帮菜, "local cuisine"), the restaurant at Shanghai Lao Fan Dian (上海老饭店, Shanghai Classic Hotel) is a good option.

Founded in 1875, Shanghai Classical Hotel offers the food represent the classic Shanghain favorites. Located near the famous Yuyuan garden in Shanghai, it has attracted many visitors around the world, including President Putin, Indonesia’s President Megawati and Singapore President Nathan.

Back to 2007 I stayed at this hotel when I had a conference in Shanghai. The location is definitely a plus. Because it is just near Yuyuan garden and old City God Temple, you can easily find the all kinds of Shanghai local snack food along the old style Shanghai streets and buildings.

The environment inside the hotel restaurant still follows the traditional settings. Like those chairs, reminds me the old days.

There are lots to choose from the menu. I remember that some website
recommends the dish like Ba Bao Ya (Eight Treasure Stuffed Boneless
Duck) and Chef Li Borong’s special croaker dish for RMB1,080? but not in the menu I saw here.

I wasn’t interested to try any luxurious dishes. Instead I just wanted to have a taste for those simple and classic Shanghai cuisine that locals love. I was pleased that I found these at the Classic Hotel restaurant.

1. Pickled Cucumbers (Jiang Huang Gua, 酱黄瓜)

A small appetizer dish simply made by pickled cucumbers, seasoning with salt, soy sauce and sugar. Unlike the smacked cucumber salad dish my Sichuan parents make at home which usually has vinegar and garlic, the Shanghai style cucumbers tastes mild but feels have been infused with soy sauce and sugar. Not crunchy as I would expect (guess because it was pickled?). It is not salty comparing to normal pickled vegetables, but has a balance of sweetness and saltiness.

2. Sweet Sour Spare Ribs (Tang Cu Xiao Pai, 糖醋小排)

A classic Shanghai small bite dish. Again, I felt the sweetness dominated the taste and I barely tasted the sourness. The meat is very tender and easy off the bone. Well-seasoned with rich flavor.

3. Red Cooked (Braised) Pork Belly (Hong Shao Rou, 红烧肉)

This is no question a classic Shanghai dish. The meat is slowly cooked, very tender and has a rich flavour. Sweetness is bit more than I expected. This restaurant version also used the quail eggs. In our home, we normally like to add the five spice to give the special flavor.

This dish definitely needs the pork belly with skin on. In my opinion, the skin is the best part:). But I know some
Westerners would be turned off by this dish as it does have some
fat. But back to those old poor days, it would be a luxurious treat to have a
dish like this:)

4. Crystal Shrimps (Shui Jing Xia Ren 水晶虾仁)

I assume the shrimps are lightly fried, but they are still kept very tender, not hard or dry at all. The dish is very light taste. I guess this is the style of Shanghai cuisine, not heavy spicy is used, totally opposite to our Sichuan style Spicy Shrimps.

5. Crab Roe Tofu (Xie Huang Dou Fu 蟹皇豆腐)

Seafood seems very popular in Shanghai. This dish is made by tofu and crab roe (called Xie Huang in Chinese). Chinese consider the crab roe a very nutritious part of crab. You can find crab roe is widely used in Shanghai style food, such as used as one of the ingredients in pork stuffed soup dumplings or half pan fried dumplings.

6. Sweet Wine Rice Ball Soup (Jiu Niang Yuan Zi, 酒酿圆子)

A sweet soup with flavour of rice wine, very mild rice wine (I guess) as I can barely tasted it. The glutinous rice balls are boiled, without fillings, but with bite. Comparing to the western style dessert, this soup is very light too. In this soup it also add the red Gou Qi (枸杞, wolfberry, the fruit of Lycium barbarum), which a fruit sometime used with other Chinese herb medicine.

7. Osmanthus Rice Cakes (Gui Hua Cakes, 桂花糕)

Lovely rice cake topped with dried osmanthus. The cake is half transparent with the aroma of the flower. Like most Chinese sweet treats, it is light and pleasant.

Lao Fan Dian Address and Website:

More Shanghai Cuisine from Locals

Apart from the above seven dishes, there are more Shanghai cuisine available from local food shops, which are also recommended by Shanghai locals. If you look for Shanghai snack food, I’d recommend to visit the old City God Temple at Yuyuan.

8. Smoked fish (Xun Yu, 熏鱼)

Although translated as “smoked”, but I don’t think it actually being smoked. I don’t know why, maybe it is because the colour is dark brown so looks like it is smoked? My mum has learnt this dish from her Shanghai friend, so you can see how we make this dish at home. It is mainly fried fish fillet with dipping sauce. I call this dish dipping fish (see recipe and video here).

9. Four Season Kao Fu (Si Ji Kao Fu, 四季烤麸)

A dish made by wheat gluten with rich flavour. But same as other Shanghai dis, mainly sweet and light salty. Tasted bit like soy sauce seasoned dried tofu maybe?

10. Lotus Root Stuffed Rice (Gui Hua Lian Ou, 桂花莲藕)

A local sweet food you may find from Shanghai street food shops. The inside of root are filled with glutinous rice first and then slowly cooked with light sugar syrup. Sliced and served.

Well, here you have, the classic Shanghai cuisine. In general, I feel it is light, definitely nothing hot or spicy, but sweetness is for sure. If you like light food, you would love it. For me, because grown up with Sichuan style home cooking, I would prefer the heavy taste like Sichuan cuisine, which will be my holiday destination for the next summer:)

Hope you like this post for famous Shanghai cuisine. If so, please share with others:)